All Building Design articles in May 2025 – Page 2
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Opinion
Delivering homes under pressure: Westminster’s response to the housing challenge
Setareh Neshati explains how Westminster City Council is responding to growing housing pressures by working with a diverse group of architects to deliver community-supported, affordable homes as part of its Fairer Westminster strategy
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Features
Why Nicholas Boys Smith’s ideas still matter in the age of Keir Starmer
Mary Richardson speaks to the founder of Create Streets about popular taste, the design challenges facing Labour’s housebuilding push, and why architects still struggle to engage with what ‘normal’ people really want
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News
Plans submitted for jmarchitects' 415-home regeneration scheme in Bolton
£100m development to include 130-bedroom hotel
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News
Repairing the urban fabric: Chris Dyson Architects restores Shoreditch weavers’ houses
Grade II-listed 18th-century property to be removed from Heritage at Risk register following extensive structural repair and conservation works
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Opinion
Let’s not waste this moment: why UKREiiF must be a platform for real change
Ana McMillin sets out why diverse leadership and inclusive decision-making must be central to the conversations taking place in Leeds
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News
Beyond the green belt review: Five things you might have missed in the London Plan consultation
Sadiq Khan’s green belt rethink got the headlines, but there was plenty more to learn from last Friday’s announcement
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News
Moxon Architects completes composite timber bridge in Germany
Source: Simon Kennedy Design aims to demonstrate sustainable bridge-building methods using timber and concrete
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News
ARB launches new EDI strategy aimed at widening access to the profession
Three-year plan outlines four goals including improved access to the register and ending discrimination
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News
Modular Scottish holiday home showcases Querkus veneer in low-carbon timber interior
A new modular holiday home in northern Scotland has used Decospan’s Querkus veneer extensively across its interiors, in what is believed to be the largest residential specification of the product in the UK to date. Taigh na Coille, designed by Edinburgh-based WT Architecture, is located in the remote landscape of ...
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Opinion
The search for somewhere: why traditional wisdom is increasingly shaping tomorrow’s places
Nicholas Boys Smith reflects on two days in Doha and a global conversation about traditional wisdom, local identity and the future of placemaking
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Building Study
Bennetts’ timber and straw robotics lab pilots new net zero carbon building standard
A small research building at Manchester Metropolitan University, constructed using low-carbon materials, is among the first to be assessed against the new NZCBS. Thomas Lane reports
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News
Government allocates £630m to boost energy efficiency in public buildings
Latest funding awards under Public Sector Decarbonisation Scheme confirmed
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News
Images released of Feilden Fowles and Tom Stuart-Smith’s proposed Clore Garden at Tate Britain
Source: Tom Stuart-Smith Studio The proposed new Clore Garden
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Features
‘I make it a virtue that I’ve changed my mind’: Khan makes a show of green belt U-turn, but where might homes be built?
In his speech last Friday, the mayor of London stressed that his green belt review was a radical policy change. Daniel Gayne asked him about the kind of land that could be targeted, while combing through his consultation documents for clues
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News
London green belt development could include new towns, Sadiq Khan confirms
Mayor’s office engaging with New Towns Taskforce but says homes must count towards targets
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News
Stanton Williams, Lynch Architects and Mole amongst RIBA East award winners
14 winning schemes include a retrofitted telephone exchange, Passivhaus almshouses and a converted barn
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Opinion
Insights from tomorrow’s architects: Remote working – urban utopia or dystopia?
Diego de Silos Urena considers how remote working could reshape urban life
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Information - BD
CPD 05 2025: Enhancing thermal performance
Despite decades of innovation in building materials, energy modelling and regulations, one stubborn truth remains: too many buildings still underperform. The design promises one level of energy efficiency – on paper – but the built reality often tells another story. This so-called performance gap is not just a technical oversight; ...
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News
Smith Young Architects’ ‘modern suburban family home’ named RIBA North West Building of the Year 2025
Other winners include projects by OMA, Sheppard Robson and Cullinan Studio
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News
Hugh Broughton Architects’ Sheerness Dockyard Church wins RIBA South East Building of the Year
Other buildings recognised include schemes by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios, Tim Ronalds Architects, Artefact, Kaner Olette Architects and Liddicoat & Goldhill
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